How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels angry at God—and ashamed of it I never said I was angry at God. I told myself it was disappointment. Or confusion. Anything that sounded more respectful. But anger has a way of staying, even when we rename it. That’s why Jeremiah matters so much to me. In Jeremiah 20, the prophet doesn’t whisper his frustration. He accuses God of misleading him. He curses the day he was born. And then—he keeps talking to God anyway. Jeremiah’s anger didn’t cancel his calling. It existed inside it. If you feel anger toward God today, you’re not crossing a line. You’re standing where a prophet once stood—still speaking, because the relationship is real enough to hold truth. #AngerAtGod #Jeremiah #BiblicalLament #EmotionalFaith #ChristianHonesty162Share
DidYouKnow+FollowAngry at God? You’re in very good company I felt rage at God for things I couldn’t change. I whispered it quietly, afraid someone would call me sinful. Then I read Jeremiah 20. He curses the day he was born. He doesn’t hide his fury. In Hebrew, it’s raw, unfiltered emotion directed at God Himself. The Bible preserves his anger, not as a flaw, but as a record of honest faith. If anger sits heavy on your heart today, it’s not sin—it’s human. And it has always been part of the conversation with God. #AngerInFaith #Jeremiah #BiblicalHonesty #ChristianEmotion #FaithAndStruggle3317Share